Novel feature of the 1974 Olds Toronado / TUE 1-20-26 / Skill shared by bats and dolphins / Hellenistic storytelling / Sports grp. for Coco Gauff / Fight night souvenir, perhaps / Historic destination for Pueblo pilgrimages / Modern pickup sport for delivery drivers / East coast convenience chain with a reduplicative name / Tour overseer, for short / Mayberry boy of '60s TV
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
Constructor: Jonathan Raksin
Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging (just a bit harder than the typical Tuesday)
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| [23D: "Star Wars" princess (LEIA)] |
Theme answers:
- NATO ALPHABET (19A: It begins with Alfa and ends with Zulu) (Echo = letter "E")
- GREEK MYTHOLOGY (26A: Hellenistic storytelling) (Echo = Nymph in love with Narcissus)
- AMAZON WAREHOUSE (34A: Modern pickup sport for delivery drivers) (Echo = some stupid A.I. thing you allow to surveil you in your own home for some reason)
- THE GRAND CANYON 44A: Historic destination for Pueblo pilgrimages) (Echo = sound repetition)
In Greek mythology, Echo (/ˈɛkoʊ/; Greek: Ἠχώ, Ēkhō, "echo", from ἦχος (ēchos), "sound"[4]) was an Oread who resided on Mount Cithaeron. Zeus loved consorting with beautiful nymphs and often visited them on Earth. Eventually, Zeus's wife, Hera, became suspicious, and came from Mount Olympus in an attempt to catch Zeus with the nymphs. Echo, by trying to protect Zeus (as he had ordered her to do), endured Hera's wrath, and Hera made her only able to speak the last words spoken to her. When Echo met Narcissus and fell in love with him, she was unable to tell him how she felt and was forced to watch him as he fell in love with himself. [...] [According to Ovid's Metamorphoses], when Narcissus died, wasting away before his own reflection, consumed by a love that could not be, Echo mourned over his body. When Narcissus, looking one last time into the pool uttered, "Oh marvellous boy, I loved you in vain, farewell", Echo too chorused, "Farewell." // Eventually, Echo, too, began to waste away. Her beauty faded, her skin shrivelled, and her bones turned to stone. Today, all that remains of Echo is the sound of her voice.(wikipedia)
• • •
The theme concept is a winner. Nice wordplay on the revealer. Really delivers on the aha. The fill on this one I liked less. Easier to fill a puzzle cleanly with fewer themers—just sayin'! The cramming together of three themers in just five rows makes the crossing fill veer sharply toward SLOP (40D: Unappetizing food). The puzzle is definitely at its crosswordesiest through there, from AGRA through LEIA ORG WTA WAWA HAR LAH to the ETNA SLOP and the always regrettable UEYS. Just not a pleasant place to spend time. But alarm bells were going off much earlier, actually. I was just POSIES PGA ORD-deep in the puzzle when I paused and thought "ORD? Already? Uh oh." It's an airport code, it's a Fort in California, it's short for "ordinance" (or "ordinal"), it's [checks database] a river in Australia!? OK, take it easy, 1989 Thursday puzzle. Anyway, ORD is some top-shelf crosswordese. OOXTEPLERNON (the god of bad short fill) always flies through O'Hare, both because it is a hellish place where people often get stuck (apt!), and because it has the crosswordesiest airport code of them all. What about SFO and LAX, you say? At least those have the cities they serve embedded in the codes themselves. ORD is some nonsense you just have to memorize (O'Hare's original name was Orchard Field Airport). I don't mean to pick on ORD too much, but every time I see it, I wonder what's making the constructor so desperate. It felt like an omen, seeing it right away.
But the most regrettable fill today wasn't the short common stuff. No. Instead, it came when someone LIT A FIRE IN A RUT. That takes the EAT A SANDWICH answer type to a whole new level—the EAT A SANDWICH IN A DINER level. This is the first time this level has ever been achieved, to my knowledge. It's one thing to roll out a weak "[verb] A [noun]" phrase, but quite another to follow that phrase with a "[preposition] A [noun]" phrase. Truly
Bullets:
- 43A: Fight night souvenir, perhaps (WELT) — "Fight night" makes me think of the audience's experience, not the fighter's. I wanted something like "ticket stub." Also, this answer was hard because I spelled the (hateful) crossing, UEYS, like so: UIES. Sadly (very sadly), both are acceptable, per NYTXW tradition.
- 37D: Sports grp. for Coco Gauff (WTA) — once again, I cannot come up with the tennis org. abbr. ATA? UTA? All sports org. abbrevs. are slowly turning into one ball of gelatinous goo in my head.
- 11D: Novel feature of the 1974 Olds Toronado (AIR BAG) — one of the clues that made this puzzle harder than the usual Tuesday. I was looking for something "novel" in the sense of strange or eye-catching. Like tailfins or a dome or laser beams or something, I dunno. Needed many crosses to see the plain-old AIR BAG.
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| [1974 Olds Toronado] |
- 20D: Prefix for element #8 (OXY) — LOL that I know the Periodic Table that well. I still don't know what element this is. Is it "Contin"? Hang on ... wait, what? Oxygen? So the "prefix for" is actually a "prefix already in"!?!?! If you say "Prefix for" something, I assume (logically) that it is a prefix that you can attach to whatever thing you're talking about, not one that's already part of the word. Unless there is an "oxyoxygen" I know nothing about, I hate this clue.
- 12D: Visibly disdainful (SNEERY) — I am visibly disdainful of SNEERY. I know you can't see me, but trust me: visibly.
That's all. See you next time.
P.S. shout-out to my mom, out on the streets protesting fascism (that's her with the "Democracy Depends on Rule of Law" sign) (shout-out to the other lady too!)
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